Thursday, August 31, 2006

The End of Independent Media

I got pretty exercised reading an article today by a left-wing journalist named Tony Long to the point that I felt it necessary to rant against it. I composed a great answer to his ill-taken points, and then their site's comment engine was down so I couldn't post it. Obviously, I came here next.

Here's the article:

Wired News: Time to Rake a Little Muck

Read it first, in all its irritating glory. He agrees with Al Gore about the scourge that is concentrated corporate media ownership; he lists problems with today's journalists like fake-story scandals and lack of talent, tenacity and guts; he sees problems with the "anarchic" internet media, and he sees 9/11 as the catalyst for years of media "groveling" at the feet of the Bush administration. His solution? Break up the conglomerates, a la Ma Bell, and remove the "vulgar need to turn a profit" from journalism (because the press is so important to our free society) by having the government license and pay all media outlets, thus allowing journalists to work from their principles instead of pandering for money.

So here's what I have to say about that:

OK, so the problem with media is too much centralization, so the solution is putting the government in charge of licensing and financing everything? Are you really naive enough to think that if the government licenses and pays everyone who reports on them that they would not exert control? This is not a new idea: it's the rage in every totalitarian state I can think of.

Another problem is that if you remove the profit motive from the press, you will reduce their product to the level we have come to expect from most government bureaucracies--a 9-to-5, "that's not my job", "I don't care if you're standing in line I'm taking my break" mentality that is bound to occur when you separate performance from reward. Under this scenario you would see far fewer talented reporters than you do now, since talented people will gravitate to a profession where their skills will be recognized and compensated. For an example of this situation, see the US public school system.

Finally, your "anarchy" argument--in this case that too many choices in online media are harmful--is a permutation of the same basic problem that Marx had with capitalism. He saw that many workers would be displaced if market forces were allowed to run free. But he did not recognize the tremendous prosperity that would result from a system tailored directly to the needs of the market, and that workers (themselves consumers, of course) would greatly benefit from capitalism in spite of the anarchy built in to the system.

In the same way, while the new media endangers jobs of people like you, it has already given the consumers of news a better product by keeping established journalists on their toes (see Dan Rather), and I believe that it will continue to grow into a form more tailored to the public's needs.


P.S. You say it's not about being objective. I agree that it is difficult to be objective, but a reporter is supposed to at least present both sides of a story. I believe that biased reporting is an important reason that people are leaving old media outlets and looking for something more in line with their perspectives.

Thank you, and good night.


filed: etcetera

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Border Showdown Leads to Prison

EL PASO, Texas - Border Patrol Agent Ignacio Ramos could hear his heart racing. He could feel the dry, hot dust burning against his skin as he chased a drug trafficker trying to flee back into Mexico.

Ramos' fellow agent, Jose Alonso Compean, was lying on the ground behind him, banged up and bloody from a scuffle with the much-bigger smuggler moments earlier.

Suddenly the smuggler turned toward the pursuing Ramos, gun in hand. Ramos, his own weapon already drawn, shot at him, though the man was able to flee into the brush and escape the agents.

Now, nearly 18 months after that violent encounter, Ramos and Compean are facing 20 years in federal prison for their actions.

Why?

According to the U.S. attorney who successfully prosecuted the agents, the man they were chasing didn't actually have a gun, shooting him in the back violated his civil rights, the agents didn't know for a fact that he was a drug smuggler, and they broke Border Patrol rules about discharging their weapons and preserving a crime scene.

You read that correctly. The drug smuggler (who was given immunity and testified against the agents at trial) escaped back across the border with his 800 pounds of marajuana, but the border guards are looking at hard time. Plus, it turns out that the agents broke policy by chasing the smuggler in the first place because "The Border Patrol pursuit policy prohibits the pursuit of someone."

Amazing.


DailyBulletin.com: Convicted Border Agent Tells His Story


If you're as ticked off as I am about this, you can sign a petition for President Bush to pardon these agents here.


filed: politics

Sunday, August 06, 2006

Zoom it Yourself

You know on CSI when they zoom and zoom and zoom into the picture and catch the perp doing whatever he does, and then they run his picture through the database and find him using his phone and catch him while he's sleeping? Now you can do this too--at least the zooming part.

It seems a photographer took tons of super-zoomed pictures using a digital camera, used special hardware to stitch it together into a huge, huge format picture, and then put it on the web. The result lets you look at a panorama of a harbor in Sydney and click on any spot in the picture to zoom repeatedly until you can clearly see pedestrians and dinner parties enjoying their meals in seaside restaurants.

Pretty cool.


Docbert.org: Sydney By Night


filed: etcetera

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Fantasy Football


Alright everybody, it's that time of year again: Fantasy Football time! Some of you may think that fantasy owners are the type of people who have no real lives and sit around during the offseason pining for football and making lime helmets for their cats.

While there may be some truth to that, I am happy to call your attention to the poet laureate of sports nerds, Bill Simmons, who may be able to change your opinion. Known as The Sports Guy, Simmons is an inveterate sports fanatic who also possesses encyclopedic knowledge of pop culture past and present and is equally comfortable (and unembarrassed) discussing the 1988 Celtics and plot arcs of Beverly Hills 90210. In short, he makes nerdiness seem cool. Check out this quote from his 2006 NBA Draft Diary:
10:20 -- The Mavs take Maurice Ager at No. 28...Ager walks up to the stage in a triple-breasted, oversized beige suit, goes to shake hands with Stern and immediately gets whistled for a foul on Dwyane Wade.
It's funny 'cause it's true.

Anyway, back to fantasy football. Simmons fantasy football article is some really good stuff. He offers hints on everything from getting rid of deadbeat fantasy owners (a very unique "three strikes and you're out" rule) to spicing up the deadline trade market (tequila shots).

We have so much to learn.


ESPN.com: The New Fantasy Rules



filed: sports